Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 42, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 April 1892 — Page 6
WOMAN AND HOME.
COFFEE ITS PLACE IN THE HOUSEHOLD AND HOW TO USE IT.
The Inventor of a Dishwashing: Machiiu. tflfA BTother of Experience—Beauty and i'iv Dlsponltion in Women—Woman and .... Her Needle—The Workbasket. $tp@saRi
Writing on coffee and its uses In the New York Independent, Katherine Armstrong says: "This delicious beny can be jgm utilized in many ways besides for the 'morning cup.' It is a pleasant, agreeifm- able change in flavoring for ices, creams, hm jellies and the like, and it has medicinal properties as well. It is a tonic, if only reasonably and sensibly indulged in, but '.T 3ika all other drinks, it can be abused in its use. Too much or too strong coffee causes palpitation of the heart and often more serious trouble with that organ. A clear, if strong infusion is often prescribed by .*• physicians as a sedative, and it is a powermh fal one but the same cup, with milk or cream ndded, is at once changed in its chemical properties, and becomes a genvine stimulant instead. To make a perfect cup of coffee is a simple process, if we have proper implements and the very best ma3 a terials for it. According to our own experience, it ruins coffe to boil it, for thereby
It parts with its delicious aroma, "Professor Blot, or some other famous chef, says by boiling it 'the aroma can be found in the attic,'while presumably the dregs only are left for drink. We believe all admit that a mixture of one-third Mocha and two-thirds Java makes the best coffee. It should be well and evenly roasted and recently and finely ground, and then the pot used that filters the boiling water upon the coffee, while it drains it clear a* crystal for use at the same time. The pot is comparatively a recent invention, but judged by the coffee and experience it stands at the head on its own merits the whole principle is sound and correct. The boiling water must pass through all the coffee and at once thereafter be cleared to be perfect, "Few, we imagine, use the repulsive old way of using flshskin or eggshells or even eggs nowadays to clear their coffee. We liave heard it said that this new invention requires more coffee for a satisfactory cup than some of the old ways, but who that loves good coffeo cares for a little difference? It is a true old adage, and true here, too, that 'if we expect to have a good horse we must feed him well.' A little coffee mill forborne use is about an indispensable. Coffee should be ground, and finely ground, shortly before it is used. Sometimes such a mill becomes clogged by particles of coffee that adhere to the inside. In such a case a handful of raw rice put in and ground will clean it perfectly. We know it is clear coffee, not adulterated, if ground in our own kitchen."
The Inventor of a Dishwashing Machine. The pntron saint of the emancipated woman of the future will be Josephine Garis Cochrane, the inventor of the dishwashing machine. She will be enshrined in the grateful heart of womanhood when the memory of Susan B. Anthony and the rest is lost in oblivion, and at the base of every column reared to commemorate the noble achievements of free and happy women her name should be written in shining letters. Josephine Cochrane was an extremely pretty western girl, eagerly interested in the most flippant affairs of society, with all the money she wanted to spend, all tho pleasures she desired, with no dishes to wash for herself and noanxiety about the women who did have to roughen their fingers in the suds. In due time she married, like other pretty girls, but it was not until after tho death of her husband that the idea of the machine came to her. Sho doesn't know exactly how or when it came she only knows that it pursued her and tormented her until she began to work It out.
Sho did not know the name of a tool or the principles of a transmitted power, and she had no idea of drawing or constructing a model. Sho had to' get the elementary books and sit down like a child and study before she could make her ideas tangiblo
T.to
the mechanics who snrricd them put. She worked at tier models nearly eight years, spent her- entire fortune, $35,000, on tho device, and finally succeeded in perfecting this wonderful dishwasher that never nicks or chips your precious plates, has no antipathy to handles on cups thai never loses its temper, asks for days off, nights out or permission to go to relatives' funerals that doesn't, servo your choicest wines to kitchen callers, borrow your Sunday things or give warning when your husband's relatives are coming on a visit. Just now the machine is in use only in the largo hotels, where it washes in an hour the entire service for 400 guests, but Mrs. Cochrane is forming a company to manufacture smaller sizes for private houses.— New York Sun.
A Mother with, Experience Speak*. Babies do not cry without cause the first cry a child gives inflates the lungs. After respiration is fully established it ceases crying if kept comfortable, warm, ^iiet and fed when necessary, never oftener than once in three hours from birth. Give tho chiid plenty of water several times a day turn it over when restless teach it to tie awake in its crib bathe every other day at night time to avoid taking cold from going out, and never after eating or upon an full stomach. Do not dress it too warmly see that its bands are loose and pinned with small safety pins never startle with loud sounds* nor handle more than is necestary, nor shake as if a toy, nor put to the breast every time it cries or opens its little mouth. If these rules are observed baby trill seldom cry.
I am not speaking from theory, but personal practice, not only of professional cases, of which I have had many, but of my own child as well. During her babyhood the was a constant education, teaching me more than all my books, and from my experience with her I learned how to teach other mothers that their children may be easily reared and a blessing instead of a nuisance, as many children are through bad training. She was chcerful, bright and happy—a sunbeam we never knew when she got her teeth they came early the had four before she was four months rid she never was sick, nor taws, nor fretful. I dressed her in short clothes from birth, so she could use her feet, which were kept warm by little woolen shoes or socks. —Ella A. Jennings, M. D», in Humanity and Health. _______
Steattty and Disposition Amonj Women* I firmly believe that in the majority of Instance* the disposition of the individual Is generally depicted on the countenance, perhaps more so to women than It is in the esse of the men.
It seems to me that if a pretty rrsmanis really desirous of preserving her good ktoks the most certain method to adopt for fibs attainment of h«r desires is to attend oot only to the preservation of her beauty,
(but
to the far more important cultivation of ft good mind. Marriages would be more numerous and happy, in my opinion, if the young women of today paid greater attention to the pursuit of the pleasures of the intelligence and not, as unfortunately is the case at the present time, to frivolous pursuits.
The habits of the average young lady nowadays are not very conducive to health and good looks, when we remember how many thoughtlessly sacrifice and prematurely age their youthful beauty in the heated ballrooms and. dancing academies of the metropolis. Late hours and their consequent evils tend also to make many women ugly before the resistless touch of time.
If it is a fact that a pretty woman grows ugly through defects in her disposition, etc., why should not many a plain looking girl, by leading a simple life and avoiding those errors which have been enumerated, become comparatively handsome? Does not a thoughtful, reflective mind impart a certain sweetness of expression to the face? There are women who, by the unselfish character of their lives, charm almost everybody with whom they come in contact yet although they may be plain looking in the strict sense of the word, their facial defects in this respect are entirely counterbalanced by their winning manner and charming expression.—Cor. London Tit-Bits. "MS »r
Woman and Her Needle.
A woman who can use her needle has a resource of comfort denied to those beings who can only find tranquillity or diversion from wearing thought in apipe or cigar, and she has the satisfaction of knowing that her employment amounts to something and will not vanish in a cloud of smoke. Bright fancies and poetic thoughts ore often woven while the hands are busily employed with needlework, and even homely mending and stocking darning are uo barriers to thought's widest range.
Margaret Fuller, whose brilliant mind and wonderful intellectual powers are as jret unrivaled by any of her sisterhood in American literature, was an efficient and ever ready helper with the family sewing. Her work was always done beautifully, never slighted nor, because her mind was broader and deeper than the minds of other women who could only sew, did she ever disdain her household task. We all know Penelope and her artful ruse to keep the suitors at bay, and smile with woman ly superiority at the stupidity of the'lovers who were so woefully ignorant of the capabilities of the needle. The famous tapes try wrought by the queen of William the Conqueror is a faithful picture gallery and invaluable to the historian. Other women in the same exalted station have left less valuable yet interesting pieces' of needle work, and one is brought -very near to-the hearts of these royal ladies who stitched many sad thoughts and disappointed hopes and baffled ambitions into the rich fabrics, as did beautiful, hapless Mary Stuart.— Harper's Bazar.
How One Woman "Kills" Time A guileless unmarried man, who asked the Washington Star, "How do women kill time?" got this answer from a woman who, with her husband, two children and two servants, lived in a house containing nine rooms. Having kept a statistical account for one year, she gave the result as followsr^ 4{^y "Number of lunchetfp'ut up, 1,157 iaafealsi ordered, 963 desserts made, 173 Lamps filled, 838 rooms dusted, 2,259 times dressed children, 786 visits received, 897 visits paid, 167 books read, 88 papers read, 558 stories read aloud, 234 games played, 829 church services attended, 125 articles mended, 1,288 articles of clothing made, 120 fancy articles made, 56 letters written, 426 hours in m.usic, 20X hours in Sunday school work, 208 hours in gardening, 49 sick days, 44 amusements attended, 10. Besides the. above I nursed two children through measles," twice cleaned every nook aud corner of my house, put up 75 jars of pickles and preserves, made. 7 trips to the dentist's, dyed Easter eggs, polished silver, and spent seven days Jn helping nurse a sick friend who was ill, besides the thousand and one duties too small to be mentioned, yet taking time to perform."
The Workbasket.
There is no bit ©t furniture in the boudoir so thoroughly characteristic of the woman as her workbasket. At the present much time and money is being spent by those who live in luxurious content upon this useful article. I do not mean to imply that handsome, costly workbaskets portray the industry of the owner, for on the other hand some of the busiest women work from the commonest of baskets. I merely say that much of the owner's personal taste enters into the choosing of the basket and its decorations. In an array of Japanese, Turkish, Chinese, Moorish, French and Indian baskets it is very difficult to make a purchase. Tall, narrow baskets, with linings of silk and narrow ribbons run through, look dainty the cone shaped basket, with dotted, pujffed muslin di chene, is exquisite, and the flat, square looking Indian basket, decorated with a dozen different colored ribbons and gold or silver cord, is very fetching. These baskets are fitted up with needle, thimble and scissor cases, also pincushion and crotchet hooks.—Philadelphia Press.
Two Sides of Matrimony.
Said an unmarried friend, as we watched the careful attention with which a young lover wrapped a light cloak arontfd the form of his sweetheart, every look and gesture showisg the service to be a delight, "I should like to know how many men ten years married would, unasked, assist their wives to adjust their wraps."
I made no reply to my cynical friend, but when a few minutes later we heard the pretty sweetheart say, "Thank you for the lovely evening the music has been an inspiration," smiled wickedly and asked, "How many wives ten years married show their appreciation of an evening of pleasure in that way?*'
Tho craving of a woman's heart for loving attention is as natural as the need of a rose for rain and sunshine. Yet let it be temembered that as a rose, although still I rose, would lose half its beauty without Its perfume, so a wife, be she nevwr so dutiful and cumbered about much serving, has lost half her loveliness if she has laid away her manners with her wedding gown.— Good Housekeeping.
An Antitarnliih for Silver.
Housekeepers who have had their toilet silver, vases and library fittiegs .tarnished by furnace awl illuminating gases will be glad to know of *ome lacquer which will prevent the trouble of continual polishing. The silver service is simply made chemically clean before the lacquer is applied, and the metal is then coverts! by means of a stiff brush, with a thik coating of the transparent varnish.
Almost all brass articles, except those subject to heat, are' now covered with a lacquer. Our brass lamps, chandeliers ami bedsteads are all lacquered, and the result is most satisfactory. There seems to be no
SiSPfl
rERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING^MATfi
reason why silver which is not in use on the table and is not subject to be washed in boiling water should not be lacquered. It is better to buy this lacquer of an experienced dealer, and there are-several varieties of it which may be obtained for this purpose, though it has not become cu^ tommy to use. them.—Ixmdon Queen.
An lmproved Household Bolt In place of the ordinary doorknob there has been introduced a lever which permits easy handling,
and
it is also useful to pull
the door firmly into place in case it has shrunk in the frame. Another important feature of the patent is a small projection on the bolt, which works into a slot, and when the door is bolted the bolt cannot be drawn back unless the handle is given a half turn to make the projection again pass through the dot. Thi is not a moment's work for a person inside the room, but it would be a difficult matter for any one trying to effect an entrance from the outside.—Philadelphia Record.
Buttonlesa Shoes, and Bedraggled Skirts. Speaking of shoe buttons, most of the ftores nowadays sew on all your shoe buttons for you just as long as the boots hold together, and there is simply no excuse for anybody to go around with great gaps up the side of their ankles.
There isn't anything on earth that demoralizes a woman as thoroughly as untidy' feet There's nothing a woman won't do if her boots are 'flappy around the ankles. She will even go through mud without raising her skirts, aud what won't she do after that?—American Dairyman.
Decorations of Denmark's Qneen. The queen of Denmark has the reputation of possessing more orders and decorations than almost any other woman royalty of Europe. She holds the Russian Red Cross, the English Order tif St. John, the Hessian Order of the Golden Lion, the Spanish Mane Iiouise Order, the Pd!rtuguese Order of Isabella, the Russian Order of St. Catharine, and is a grand commander of the Order of the Dunnebrog This last is a very high order and is rarely conferred even upon sovereigns. Her husband holds forty-four foreign orders.
Several Things a W^man Should Know. A married woman in business for herself can sigri her name as she pleases. Business men do not worry oyer small points of etiquette. In indorsing a check it is customary to follow the forfa used to indicate the pay^e on the face thereof, and to write the indorsement about two inches from tho top. If you die without making a will your husband will be appointed administrator, and the bank will hold the money to his order on production of letters of tul •ministration.—New York Heral^yv
A Womanly Qneen.
The queen of Italy is described as a tall, fair-haired lady, a little inclined to bo stout, but very pretty. She is a highly educated woman, with a special taste for literature and a knowledge of languages which enables her to talk to her foreign embassadors each in his native tongue. Perhaps the greatest gift of this greatly beloved queen, whom her subjects fondly call the Pearl of Savoy, is a rare womanly grace and tact which endears her to all her subjects.
She Always Gets a Seat.
Mrs. A. Plomb enters a crowded street car with admirable self possession. She advances to a middle aged ,man with an apologetic countenance and exclaims, effusively, "Why, how do you do, Mr. Blank I'm so glad to see you!" 'Of course it is not Mr. Blank, and she knows it, And. of course she secures the seat wh^ch he relinguitfhes in her favor. Alasi' who can withstand the wiles of a wily woman?— Boston Transcript.
Unincumbered by Baggage..Mile. Elise St. Omer, the celebrated French explorer, travels without any luggage, not even a handbag. All she requires is stowed away in her capacious pockets. Thus equipped this energetic lady has traveled through all parts of Europe, Asia and America, has visited Mormons, Japanese and Cingalese, ridden side by side with Bedouins and climbed the EDmalayasilll
Nerve |n the Dentist's Chalr^s One of the most distinguished dentists of Turin, Dr. Martini, writes to tell me that he has been surprised to observe in his daily practice that women undergo every variety of dental operation with much more courage and facility than men. And Dr. Mela adds that men swoon under tho dentist's hands much more frequently than women.—Professor Lombroso in Fornightly Review. ..
jg
Household Conveniences.
Every housekeeper should provide herBelf with little conveniences for doing h~r work. A short handled, broad paint brush is handy to wash the outside of window sills, and an old toothbrush for washing around the glass.—New York Journal.
Hard Working VeneU&ft"*Women. In Venice I saw women carrying yokes over their shoulders, to which were hung buckets of water. Their arms had enormous muscles, and indeed they seemed universally as strong as the men.—Charleston News and Courier.
A Colorado governess has established herself in a summer resort in the CatsMlls for the past five or six snmme|s, and for a stated sum an hour she has taken care of the children of guests, entertaining the by interesting talks on a variety of subjects.
The Bryn Mawr college girls wear long Bowing robes and mortarboard caps. At Wellesley the experiment has beets tried, but with partial success, the cap and gown being relegated to obscurity except for special occasions.
When in his carriage, if baby is an active child and old enough to amuse himself, provide him with something with which be can entertain himself, so that he will tot play with bis afghan, pull his cap brings,
A house Ifthy be said to be habitable when it affords its occupants reasonable protection for health failing in this particular it comes short of fulfilling the requirements conveyed in this term.
The conductors on all the street cars and other vehicles for the public in a large section of Warsaw, Russia, are women, who fulfill their duties better to the satisfaction of the public than men.
To remove splashes of paint from window glass melt some soda in very hot water and wash the glass with it, using soft flannel.
Mrs. Seymoar-Howells thinks there are two ways to persuade men—one by the power of love and the other by reason of Sear.
A Quotation Party.
One of the popular home amusements^
S'hat
romises to be the "quotation party." it will prove a welcome relief to the run of card parties and dances and at the same time be highly instructive to every one engaged in it will be easily gathered from these few hints.
Let the hostess provide five tables and invite twenty guests. Furnish each table with four sheets of paper. On each of these have written four well known quotations from popular authors. With each quotation sheet stipply a long card with spaces numbered from one to eighty, and at the top of the caM write "Name of of author." On the. first or head- table place a bell.
The guests arrived, have them draw lots to see at which table they will first sit. This done and the guests seated, the work of study begins. As soon as the guest recognizes an author's quotation he marks his author's card the name of the author. Thus if a person sits at the second table and finds in front of him a quotation slip numbered 28, 24, 25 and 26, he writes on the blank spaces of the other slip corresponding with these numbers the names of the authors of quotations 23, 24, 25 and 26.
Five or six minutes is the time allowed for study, and at the end of that period the hostess rings her bell for a recess. She then examines the author slip if each contestant and crosses out the name of each author that is wrongly given. After this she rings the bell again and each contestant takes the quotation slip to the right of him, retaining his own authorship.
When the time limit has again expired, the slips are once more examined as before, and another change of quotation slips is made. When all four slips at the table have been examined, the students change tables, those at No. 5 going to No. 4, those at 4 to 8, 3 to 2, 2 to 1 and 1 to 5. The study then proceeds as before and is not ended until all the quotation slips have 'been examined.
The evening's study finished, the hostess takes all the slips and announces the names Of the winners of the first, second and bOoby prizes. These prizes ought to be books.-^-New York Recorder.
Empress Eugenie's Inventions. |j|| There has often been mention made of the fashions that the Empress Eugenie invented, but I do not think they are as numerous as has been imagined. Her first invention in that line was the introduction of gold and silver hair powder, gold being iised by brunettes and silver by blonds. She was still the Countess de Teba when she brought about this novel and brilliant innovation. "With her fair hain glistening with silver, a detail that added a dreamy etherealness to her beauty, she looked Jike a vision of fairyland in the ballroom or the opera.
Next she brought about a change in the coiffure of all the fashionable ladies in the world, by roiling back her hair in front over two long narrow horsehair cushions, placed at the side of the head and known later by the familiar name of "rats." The style was becoming, and was universally adopted soon after her marriage to Napoleon
ni.
STRENGTH AND VlfiOR. 6ET IT BY USING
DR. GREENE'S NERVUR
I Guaranteed Purely Vegetable and Harmless. '11
Great Spring Remedy.
Dr. Greene's Nervurafs the jrrcat saver of life and liealtb. It removes atl nervous irritability, and perfectly and completely cures |j||j
Nervousness and Nervous Exhaustion.
Why do yon suffer from each an exhausted, pro*trated ana dragged-out feeling when Dr. Greene's Nerrar* sorely euxeaall
Weak and Tired Feelings.
Thousands aaifer from wakeful nights, and rise morning* tmrefre*l»ed. Br. Greene's Xervura give* aalaial reðing tleep.—the perfect cure For
Sleepless Nights and Tired Waking.
reofile with enstrniijtames have stranee. faint awi cwrvou* oeiuattons.immlmes*, trembling, palpitation. Ir. Grwene'* Serrura is
•far-
What to Teach a Daughter. Teach her that not only must die love her father and mother, but honor them in word and deed.
That work is worthy always when it is well done. That the value of money is just the good it will do in life, but that she ought to know and appreciate this value
That the man who wishes to marry her is the one who tells her so and is willing to work for her, and not the one who whispers silly love speeches and forgets that men cease to be. men when they have no object in lifd. |1|
That her best confidant is always her mother, and that no one sympathizes with her in her pleasures and joys as you da
That unless she shows courtesy to others she need never expect it from them, and that the best answer to rudeness is being blind to it.
That when God made her body he intended that it should be clothed properly and modestly, and when she neglects herself she is insulting him who made her.
Teach her to think w611 before she says no or yes, but to mean it when she does. Teach her that her own room is her nest, and that to make it sweet and attractive is a duty as well as a pleasure. Itltllf
Teach her that if she can sinf oFread or draw, or give pleasure in any way by her accomplishmedts, she is selfish and unkind if she does not do this gladly.
Teach her to be a woman—self respecting, honest, loving and kind, and then you will have a daughter who will be a pleasure to you always, and whose days will be long and joyous in the land which the Lord hath given her.—Ladies' Home Journal.
W S
But her chief invention, and
one that brought about the foundation of a
new
industry in the world of commerce, was that of crinoline.—Paris Cor. St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Did it ever occur to you to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, the best spring medicine? Try a bottle this season. It will do you good.
S
fe-
A
ploa for
Kll
Poor
iite
only remedy
Heart Failure and Palpitation.
Wat sale tor 3ra#gt» Price, tt per tpttfe. Besnreaod ncttette botUete Kiicd with tittr trade auk Mtl "Sttrax*.n ,r
|t Goods
I am one of the "shut in winter ones." I would like to do a little missionary work out of the regular line for humanity's sake.
I have asked many of my friends if they would not like to have for underwear and bed wear more of the kuit garments. They think it would be nice and they would laundry so easily. Night wear for both sexes could be knit, and it would be much more soft and grateful for summer. For bed use, sheets must be very soft and cool also pillow slips, and for children, all their little garments would be so much better to laundry. Also common knit dresses for ladies could be, made in colors, and we could easily "fil ourselves" to them without having to go at least three times to have a common dress "fitted."
I wish if there are any ladies'that can have any influence with tho manufacturers of these goods they would use it to have them introduced as soon as possible. I think the public is ready and waiting for them.—Cor. St. Paul Pioneer Press.
Keeping Silver Bright.
To wash silverware never use soap in the water, as it dulls the luster, giving the outside more the appearance of pewter than silver. When it wants cleaning rub it with
p.
piece of soft leather and prepared
chalk, the latter made into a kind of paste with pure water, us impure water might contain grit. Use silver if it is to be kept bright—do not tie it up in bags and, set it away to tarnish. Use it all the time and it will stay bright and shining.—Springfield Homestead. |gp |gg "Ayer's Hair Vigor is a most excellent preparation for the hair. I speak of it from experience. Its use promotes the growth of new hair, and makes it glossy and soft. The vigor is a sure cure for dandruff."—J. W. Bowen, Editor Enquirer, McArtbur, Ohio.
WOOH£ALTH~^
aisfits
Dr. Greene's Nervura Is U»c best blood lovlgorator, and it immediately overcomes llie weakness, languor and lack of energy due to
Blood, Malaria
and tow Vitality.
Dr. Greene's Ncrvnra is acknowledged everywhere a» ibe greatest of all Nerve and U... absolutely sure to strengthen
Weak and Shattered Nerves.
Dyspepsia, distress, fatness, faint, "all gone" feeling, ess, Hrer disease, eonsupauom are per'fectij eared by Dr. Greene's Kervara, a* are also
Headache and Dizziness.
People often lose their appetite, the liver 1* loactive^Uie towels eonsUpated. Dr. Greene** I*trvara is exactly Ujc remedy for
Poor Appetite and Constipation.
Dr. Greene, the well-known specialist to tbe core of c&ronte diseases. S West 14 Ui 8U New
iYouGanStopaGooghl at any time with DOCTOR
ACKERS
I ENGLISH III
REMEDY!
I IT WILL CyRE A COLD 1 III TWELVE HOURS 1
I A 85 cent Bottle may save yout "$100 in Boetor's bills-may saves •your life. Ask your SrnggiatK Sfor it. IT TASTES GOOD. 5 pure"PINK"P"LLs*"""""
•Dr. Acker's English. Pillss
OURK BILIOUSNESS. S Small, plcnxant, a favorito with tho ladles. S W. II. HOOKER & CO., 46 West Broadway, N. T. liinnm"""""""""*"""""""""*'
RICHMOND
EUROPEAN.
tjj E. A. FROST, Propn.
Formerly manager Sherwood House, Evan»ville, Ind., late Mangr. Hotel Grace, Chicago*. Rooms 75c, $1.00, $1.50 Per Day. 8team Heat Centrally Located, two blocks from P. O. and Auditorium, opp. tho ue* Lester Building. N, "W. Cor State and Vanlluren—CHICAGO
Ions Concha, Golds, Sore Throat, Group, WhoopCough, Bronchitis trad Asthma. A omnia onre An ing Cough, Bronchitis trad Asthma. A omnia onre An Consumption in tint nigen, and »iraro roller in advanoad
It-—a
4 a so re
statgB*. TEnfttenoa. .¥oa«dUveothe«Boeueatraeot
UX0 MOOOO* .«WI WUHWW VawuiwfiMivw after taking the first doso. Sold by d««lcm oyurwhM* Mqgo Botuoi, fio oenta aad &L.00. it Cures Influenza.
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A pamphlet of Information and ab\stractof tho laws, Showing How to/ ^Obtain Patents, Caveats, Traded rks, Copyrights, sent int./.
Addis** MUNN A OO.JA
J61 Wroiidwny, Wow York.
||C Missed h|s Opportunity! 1IOVT Mlw sit I'onr*, ltenler. The mnJoHly noglect their
never
&
3
op-
portnnillos, mid from tlml cnntellvo In povsrty and die lis obscurity I Harrowing detpitlr ti tlio lot of ninny, ns thoy look batik on lost, fororer lost, opportunity. J.lfb Is pass* Ingt Ronch out Bo tip nnd doing. Impvovoyonr opportunity, and secure prosperity, pronifnoncc. poaco. It was ssMbysnhllosopl i«r, that "tfio .(Joddoit of Fortune offon a golueit (wportnnlty to eftch porion At soma period oulffx embrftco tbachftnco, And slidponrs onltior Helton fail tod# •o nnd sho departs,
to retnro." How ilmll you find*
the 0OMsx opportnolt/f Investigate every ennnce tbftt Appears worthy, and of fnlr promise that ia whftt all eeitfatmen do. Hore Is an oppertmilty, snch a« Is not oft**' within tho reach of laboring people. Improved, JtwJil gbr^ At least* grand aUrt in life. The
JOI.DK*
opportunity for
many lb here. Money to be made rapidly and honorably* by any industrious person of either ftox. All ages. \onoa». do the work and live at home, wherever ton are. Eviti b* ginncrs aro easily earning from to &IO per day.
You-
can do as well If yon will work, not.too hard, but IndnstH* onsly and yon can Increaee yonr Incmno as *on goon, Yoo can glvoapare time only, or all yonr time to the works Ea»y to learn. Capital not required. Wo-atari yon. AH l« comparatively new and really wonderful, Instruct
aiiA
•how yon how. dree, Failure unknown among our work* ere.
So
room to explain here. Write and learn all free*. by retnrn mail, unwise to delay. Addrons at once. ii. llallett 32 Co., 'Box tSBO, Portland, SlulMt
I
WHERE DOLLARS ARE MADE
Thflineof »b etQUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTB" through KfcKTUCKY. TENNESSEE, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, and LOUISIANA OFFERS GREATER OPPORTUNITIES TO
SETTLERS,?' MANUFACTURERS & GENERAL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE,
thftu any other part of the V. H., vast bodies of
Coal, Iron, Timber & Farm Lands
Also THOUSANDS of ACRES of LONG $. LEAF YELLOW PINE for sale cheap. & This road rans through the thriving torrn* of Lexington, Danville, and Somerset, Ky. Kockwood.H arrlman.and Chatanouga, Term
Birmingham, and Ttwca-
Monroe, and tShrereport, La- Some of the new towns will donate money and land to locate manufacturing enterprise#.
The R. R. Co. will make low rates for Passenger* and Freight, and afford investors every opportunity to examine the different localitiex. If necessary, will »end areprenentatlve with the party.
Full particular*, andeny required intortnation, will be mat by mail on application to D,
3.TJED
WARDS, G. P, & T. A at..". Q. itt Route, CINdlNNATI, a
